Lignin-Containing Photoactive Resins for 3D Printing by

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Lignin-containing Photoactive Resins for 3D Printing by Stereolithography Jordan Sutton, Kalavathy Rajan, David P. Harper, and Stephen C. Chmely ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b13031 • Publication Date (Web): 26 Sep 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 26, 2018

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Lignin-containing Photoactive Resins for 3D Printing by Stereolithography Jordan T. Sutton1,2, Kalavathy Rajan1,3, David P. Harper*1, Stephen C. Chmely*1

1. Center for Renewable Carbon, The University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, United States 2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, The University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, United States 3. Department of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science, The University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, United States

Corresponding authors’ email: [email protected], [email protected]

Keywords: lignin, 3D printing, stereolithography, additive manufacturing, resin

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Abstract Generating compatible and competitive materials that are environmentally sustainable and economically viable is paramount for the success of additive manufacturing using renewable materials. We report the successful application of renewable, modified lignin-containing photopolymer resins in a commercial stereolithography system. Resins were fabricated within operable ranges for viscosity and cure properties, using up to 15% modified lignin by weight. A four-fold increase in ductility in cured parts with higher lignin concentration is noted as compared to commercial SLA resins. Excellent print quality was seen in modified lignin resins, with good layer fusion, high surface definition, and visual clarity. These materials can be used to generate new products for additive manufacturing applications and help fill vacant material property spaces, where ductility, sustainability, and application costs are critical.

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1. Introduction Additive manufacturing offers greater freedom of design, quicker product development, and at a cheaper cost over traditional manufacturing techniques. In 2018, the global additive manufacturing (AM) market has a predicted value of $12.8 billion.1 The complexity offered by greater design freedom means that parts can be topologically optimized to improve mechanical properties and hybrid materials can be designed that can achieve material properties unobtainable with conventional material processing.2-3 However, one major hurdle for all AM technologies is in the design of new materials that are compatible with these AM processes but still comparable in cost and properties to those of traditional manufacturing. Renewable-sourced biomaterials are sustainable and abundant, giving them a competitive advantage over materials derived from fossil fuels. Hence, engineering novel biomaterials provides the opportunity to create cost-effective materials that reduce the environmental impact of additive manufacturing while meeting traditional material requirements. Stereolithography (SLA) is an AM process that uses a bath of liquid photopolymer resin, a movable platform, and a laser UV source to cure resin layer by layer to build part geometries. The main limitation of SLA technology is the photopolymer build material. In the next decade, the market for 3D printing materials is expected to grow to at least $16 billion, and a significant portion of that is predicted to be shared by photopolymers.1 Currently, these materials are few, limited in features, and expensive.4 Resins designed for AM processes are complex mixtures generally composed of a photoinitiator, monomers and oligomers, and other additives incorporated to achieve

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specific properties. Photosensitizers and UV blockers, for instance, can be added to shift cure wavelength and affect reaction kinetics.5 Resin formulations are finely tuned to work efficiently with the printer configuration and achieve the desired material properties. As expected, these complex formulations are costly to design and produce. In addition to cost, photopolymers typically exhibit issues with shrinkage, brittleness, and slow cure speed. In SLA, these problems are related to the photopolymerization reaction. Therefore, one approach to solving these problems is to control the reaction by altering the resin formulation. Lignin is the world’s second-most abundant natural polymer, and the only highvolume renewable feedstock composed of aromatics.6 Most of the lignin available is produced as a byproduct of cellulose production, and although much of it is used as a fuel source for these processes, some methods can generate up to 60% more lignin than is used during combustion.7 In fact, by 2022, 62 million tons of lignin will be produced annually.8 Second-generation biofuels derived from lignocellulosic sources are poised to play an important role in alternative energy solutions, and the economic success of these biorefineries lies with co-product revenue streams. Much work has gone toward the valorization of lignin for use in fuels and chemicals. Lignin also shows great promise for use in sustainable polymers and soft materials,9 and several commercially viable products containing lignin have been investigated.10 Recently, organosolv and aquasolv lignin were used as an additives in polymer composites, without prior functionalization, in order to enhance the structural rigidity.11-12 As demonstrated in these investigations, lignin-containing composites formed via injection molding or fused deposition molding (3D printing) exhibited

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improvements in inter-layer adhesion and a corresponding increase in tensile strength. However, such improvements were achieved via non-covalent hydrogen bonding or physical crosslinking and hence, additional reinforcement was required in order to improve the overall material toughness. Such limitations could be overcome by suitably modifying lignin such that it forms covalent linkages with the copolymer molecules. In contrast to simply blending technical lignin with existing petrochemical-based polymers, chemical modifications to isolated technical lignin typically lead to improved chemical, physical, and thermal properties of the resulting product. In fact, these can even offer additional functionality, such as an increase in photoactivity. For instance, bio-plastics developed from acylated model-lignin compounds like syringol, creosol, and vanillin were shown to possess enhanced thermal stability and tunable viscoelastic properties.13-14 Bio-based epoxy resins made from depolymerized and glycidylated softwood lignin displayed superior flexural modulus and flexural strength.15 Our group has also recently demonstrated that engineered hydrogels containing methacrylatemodified hardwood lignin exhibited increase in water retention capacity and tunable mechanical properties.16 Moreover, alkene-functionalized lignin was successfully harnessed for photo-induced polymerization reactions.17 In short, these studies demonstrate that designing lignin building blocks via chemical modification of the OH groups is a feasible approach for formulating 3D printing resins with tunable properties. We are interested in developing transformations of lignin to make it amenable to incorporation into new high-performance engineered materials. Here, we report on our efforts to produce photoactive resins that contain organosolv lignin isolated from hybrid poplar. We formulated these resins by chemically modifying the lignin macromolecules

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to contain methacrylate moieties. Then, we blended the lignin with commercially available resin components to formulate a complete resin. We used a commercial desktop 3D printer from Formlabs to print with these resins, and report on the spectroscopic, mechanical, and thermal properties of these materials. This work represents a platform from which the design of advanced photoactive resins for additive manufacturing purposes can commence. 2. Experimental Section 2.1. Reagents and materials. Lignin (86% purity, Mw = 2973, Đ = 4.6) was isolated from pulp-grade wood chips of hybrid poplar (Populus trichocarpa × P. deltoides) using an ethanol organosolv technique and characterized as described by Bozell and coworkers.18 Ethoxylated pentaerthritol tetraacrylate (SR494, Sartomer) and aliphatic urethane acrylate (Ebecryl 8210, Allnex) were used as resin bases. A monofunctional urethane acrylate (Genomer 1122, Rahn) was used as a reactive diluent. Diphenyl (2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl) phosphine oxide (PL-TPO, Esstech) and 2,2’(2,5-thiophenediyl)bis(5-tert-butylbenzoxazole) (Benetex OB Plus, Mayzo) were used as the resin photoinitiator and UV blocker, respectively. Commercial PR48 resin was obtained from Colorado Photopolymer Solutions (Boulder, CO) for comparison purposes (the open-source recipe for PR48 is freely available online at the time of writing at https://learn.ember.autodesk.com/blog/open-source-resin). 2-chloro-4,4,5,5tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaphospholane (TMDP, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.) was stored in a vacuum desiccator to protect it from atmospheric moisture. Endo-N-hydroxy5-norbornene-2,3-dicarboximide (Sigma-Aldrich) was used as received.

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2.2. Lignin modification for resin formulation. The protocol for lignin acylation (Scheme 1) was adapted from the method for syringyl methacrylate synthesis as described by Epps and coworkers.13-14 Methacrylic anhydride (Alfa Aesar) was allowed to react with lignin (1.2 equiv of the lignin OH groups as measured by 31P NMR) in the presence of 4-dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP, Sigma-Aldrich) as a catalyst (0.04 equiv of methacrylic anhydride). The reaction mixture was incubated at 60 °C for 48 hours and the lignin thus acylated (lignin-M) was purified by quenching the byproducts and unreacted substrate with a saturated solution of sodium bicarbonate. Lignin-M that precipitated during the reaction was washed with copious amounts of water until the washes reached neutral pH. The resulting precipitate was dried under reduced pressure at 40 °C for 48 hours and used for resin formulation. Scheme 1. Synthesis scheme for lignin-M using methacrylic anhydride.

O

OH

O O

methacrylic anhydride

O O

+ lignin

O O

lignin-M

2.3. Lignin characterization. The hybrid poplar lignin and lignin-M were characterized using 31P NMR and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopies to monitor the chemical changes in lignin and the efficiency of acylation reaction. Sample preparation and quantification of lignin OH groups was achieved using 31P NMR spectroscopy as described by Balakshin and Capanema.19 Briefly, the lignin samples were phosphitylated using TMDP, and the resulting NMR spectra were phased and

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referenced to the chemical shift of the water-derived complex of TMDP (δ 132.2 ppm). Quantification was achieved using endo-N-hydroxy-5-norbornene-2,3-dicarboximide as the internal standard. All 31P NMR spectra were collected using a Varian 400-MR spectrometer (Varian Inc., Palo Alto, CA), operating at 161.92 MHz and 25 °C. FTIR spectra in the range of 4000 to 600 cm–1 were obtained using a UATR Spectrum Two instrument (PerkinElmer, Llantrisant, UK), where the finely ground samples were analyzed at 16 scans per spectrum and 4 cm-1 resolution. The FTIR peaks were assigned based on previous reports,20-22 and the spectra were subjected to statistical analysis using principal component analysis (PCA). 2.4. Resin formulation. The formulations of the 3-D printing resins used in this investigation are presented in Table 1. The photoinitiator and UV blocker were weighed and combined in a polypropylene container. The resin bases were added by weight in increasing viscosity as follows: the monofunctional urethane acrylate (Genomer 1122), the tetra-acrylate oligomer (SR494), and finally the aliphatic urethane acrylate (Ebecryl 8210). The partially formulated resin was mixed in a kinetic mixer (FlackTek, Speedmixer Dac 150 FVZ) at 2400 RPM for 0.5 min. Lignin-M was then weighed and added to the container and the resin was mixed again at 2400 RPM for 1 min. The lignin resins (LR) thus formulated (5-15% lignin by weight, LR5, LR10, and LR15) were stored in tightly sealed opaque containers to protect them from light. Table 1. Composition of Modified Resins

Resin

SR494 (wt%)

Ebecryl 8210 (wt%)

Genomer 1122 (wt%)

Lignin-M (wt%)

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PLTPO (wt%)

Mayzo OB+ (wt%)

8

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PR48

39.78

39.78

19.89

0

0.4

0.16

LR5

37.84

37.84

18.92

5

0.4

0

LR10

35.84

35.84

17.92

10

0.4

0

LR15

33.84

33.84

16.92

15

0.4

0

2.5. Resin working curves. All resins were characterized for critical cure dosage and penetration depth parameters using the working curve method outlined elsewhere.23 This method relies on a relationship between cure thickness and dosage derived from the Beer-Lambert Law as shown below: Cd = Dp — ln(E) – Dp — ln(Ecrit)

(1)

where Cd is the cure depth, Dp is the penetration depth, Ecrit is the critical dosage exposure required to cure the resin, and E is the dosage applied per layer. This dosage can be controlled by the laser scan velocity in accordance with the following relation: E =

PL

(2)

Vs hs

where Vs is the scan line velocity, hs is the scan line spacing, and PL is the laser power. Together, equations 1 and 2 can be used to experimentally determine Dp and Ecrit, since a plot of cure depth (thickness) versus the natural log of dosage (E) can be fit with a line whose slope is penetration depth (Dp) and whose y-intercept (b) is given as b = –Dp — ln(Ecrit)

(3)

A rectangular model was designed using AutoCAD (Autodesk, Inc., San Rafael, CA) having dimensions 40 × 64 mm2. It was composed of 32 squares that had varying

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thickness ranging from 5 to 20 layers. The model was printed directly on the resin bath to ensure that the resultant thicknesses were due only to the applied dosage. Excess resin was used to avoid oxygen inhibition of curing during laser-induced photopolymerization. The 3D printed specimen was removed from the bath and cleaned of excess resin. The material thickness was measured for each square using a digital Vernier caliper and plotted against the natural log of the dosage. A linear regression was performed on the data to obtain the slope (corresponding to Dp) and y-intercept (related to the critical dosage as described by equation 3 above). 2.6. 3D printing using lignin resins by stereolithography. Models for 3D printing were designed in AutoCAD, and all samples were generated using a Formlabs (Formlabs, Inc., Somerville, MA) Form 1+ desktop stereolithography (SLA) printer, installed with a modified version of the printer’s software called OpenFL. The SLA printer used a 120 mW Class-1 laser emitting at 405 nm, and had a build volume of 125 × 125 × 165 mm3. The 3D printing resins were stored and used at room temperature. Custom print files for each resin were designed for PR48 and the LR formulations using dose calculations obtained from the resin working curves. The laser settings were obtained by modifying the laser-scan velocity that delivered the necessary dosage, as per eqn. (2). Print files were designed to cure the resins of 50 µm thickness. OpenFL was used to generate the scaffolds before printing. Tensile bars were built at a 45° angle with scaffolds edited to avoid placement along the gauge length. The printed parts were separated from the build platform and soaked in two consecutive baths of isopropanol for 10 min each to remove any uncured resin and scaffolds. A 400 W metal halide UV (arc) lamp (Uvitron International Inc., West

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Springfield, MA), with irradiance capacity of 200 mW/cm2 at a height of 7.62 cm was used to post-cure the printed parts for 3 min. 2.7. Materials characterization. The viscosity of the formulated resins was measured using a TA Instruments AR-G2 rheometer with cone and plate geometry. The rheometer was configured with a 40 mm diameter cone at a truncation gap of 56 µm. Tests were performed over a range of shear rates from 0.1 to 100 Hz at 25 °C. Chemical characterization of the cured samples was performed using FTIR spectroscopy, where the solids samples were directly analyzed on the crystal of an ATR accessory attachment. Five individual spectra were collected for all samples. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) was performed using a PerkinElmer Pyris 1 TGA. Each test was programmed to run from 30 °C to 600 °C at a heating rate of 10 °C/min. All tests were done under a continuous nitrogen flow of 20 mL/min. Ultimate tensile strength and Young’s modulus of the cured samples were obtained using an Instron 5567 dual column universal testing machine. A 30 kN static load cell was used. Tests were performed following the ASTM D638 standard according to type V specimen dimensions. A 1 mm/min extension rate was applied for all tests. Scaffold marks on printed samples were removed by sanding prior to testing to avoid any stress concentration. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was performed using a Phenom ProX with an accelerating voltage of 10 kV. Samples were cut to size and cleaned of debris prior to mounting. 3. Results and Discussion

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3.1. Modified lignin characterization. Lignin-M, obtained via acylation of OH groups of hybrid poplar lignin with methacrylic anhydride (Scheme 1), was characterized using 31P NMR and FTIR spectroscopy. Figure 1a depicts the FTIR spectra, in which lignin-M had a significant reduction in OH functional groups (3403 cm-1). This is expected, as the number of OH groups is depleted as the acylation reaction takes place (Scheme 1). The FTIR spectra indicate an increase in methacrylate functional groups attached to the modified lignin OH groups, as evidenced by increases in peaks corresponding to C=O stretches, C-O-C stretches, and in plane –CH2 bending vibrations (1723, 1131 and 943 cm-1, respectively). 31

P NMR spectroscopy is another method used to quantify the changes in lignin

OH groups, and is particularly useful to detect differences among substitution at the aliphatic, syringyl (S), guaiacyl (G), para-hydroxy (H), and carboxylic acid (COOH) hydroxyl groups. As shown in Figure 1b, OH groups in lignin-M undergo substantial substitution, where 92% of these are acylated. Despite sequential washes with saturated sodium bicarbonate solution and water, we were able to detect scant amounts (0.06 mmol/g) of residual methacrylic acid, a byproduct of lignin acylation, as indicated by the shifted COOH peak in Figure 1b. However, additional washes with weak alkali solutions (0.1 N NaOH)15 resulted in dissolution of lignin-M. We chose the sodium bicarbonate wash to minimize the loss of lignin during processing.

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Figure 1. (A) Fourier transform infrared spectra of hybrid poplar lignin before (top, brown) and after (bottom, green) methacrylate modification of the OH groups to afford lignin-M. (B) 31P NMR spectra of the same samples (color scheme and position identical) with integration ranges taken from Balakshin and Capanema19. 3.2. LR formulations. We used lignin-M as a source of acrylate oligomers and reactive diluent at 5 to 15% by weight to formulate our 3D printing resins. To ensure that lignin-M was incorporated into the resin bases homogenously, we created the LR mixtures in small batches and allowed them to rest for 48 h. Unmodified lignin dissolved poorly in acrylate-based resins, whereas lignin-M showed significant improvement in homogeneity owing to the compatibility of its methacrylate functional groups (Figure S1). We identified resin viscosity as a critical parameter for compatibility with an additive printing mechanism because of its role in affecting the resin recoating

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procedure over the curing surfaces between two contiguous layers. Fast laser scan speeds meant that, in general, the speed at which the part can be printed is determined by how quickly the printer can reset for a new layer. Higher viscosities result in longer wait times for the recoating procedure and overall longer printing duration. The viscosity measurements for LR5-15 (Figure 2) showed that they displayed Newtonian behavior and had a viscosity range from 0.44 to 1.66 Pa·s. Commercial manufacturers have reported viscosities in the ranges of 0.85 to 4.5 Pa·s for their 3D printing resins, so LR515 are evidently viable for creating equivalent print designs. The measured viscosity of LR5-15 increased with increasing lignin-M content, which implies a limit to the amount of lignin the base resin can host and still be within a usable viscosity range without additional diluent.

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Figure 2. Plot of viscosity versus shear rate of photo curable acrylate resins containing various amounts of lignin-M. 3.3. Resin cure properties. The working curve approach is a basic model for formulating SLA resins, since it provides a measurement of threshold energy required to initiate photopolymerization (Ecrit) and also helps to evaluate the resin cure properties.23 The working curves generated for all LR formulations are shown in Figure 3, and the corresponding cure properties are listed in Table 2, along with the target dosage for a printing a layer with a thickness of 50 µm (a photograph of the windowpane rectangle used to generate working curves is provided as Figure S2).

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Figure 3. Working curves showing cure thickness as a function of the natural log of UV dosage for PR48 and LR formulations. Linear regressions are shown as dotted lines, and the related values are tabulated in Table 2 from Equations 1-3 above. Penetration depth (Dp) is the distance photons travel in the resin before they are absorbed by a resin component. Resins with high Dp will allow more photons to pass farther into the resin, causing it to potentially cure thicker than a resin with a lower Dp. This results in poor resolution control and nonuniformity in the build geometry. Typically, SLA resins contain a UV blocker (Mayzo OB+ in PR48, see Table 1) to tune the Dp and reduce the required precision during printing. Since lignin contains several UV-active moieties (aromatic rings and C=O bonds), we expected that it would readily absorb UV photons and potentially serve the same role as the UV blocker. Consequently, we prepared all LR formulations without Mayzo OB+. Surprisingly, the added lignin does not appear to retard the penetration of the UV photons to the same degree as the UV blocker in PR48. As is evident from the data in Table 2, even up to 15 wt-% lignin-M, Dp for the LR formulations was still higher than that for PR48, which contains 0.16 wt-% UV blocker. As expected, Dp decreased in resins with higher amounts of incorporated lignin-M. Evidently, lignin-M in the LR resins could act not only as a structural feature but also as a UV blocker, albeit with much lower efficiency compared to traditional UV blockers. We are currently investigating the efficacy of lignin to be used as a specialized UV blocker in these formulations. Table 2. Cure parameters for tested resin formulations Resin

Dp (mm) Ecrit (J—cm-2)

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Formulation PR48

0.105(5) 0.05(2)

LR5

0.34(1)

0.022(5)

LR10

0.26(1)

0.06(2)

LR15

0.152(5) 0.05(1)

Relative uncertainties in the final digit are reported in parentheses. Dp: penetration depth; Ecrit: Critical cure dosage

Interestingly, the critical cure dosage (Ecrit) decreases significantly at 5-wt% loading but changes little for higher amounts. Although a higher critical cure dosage will result in a larger starting dosage and could significantly increase the curing time, evidently the presence of lignin does not deter resin curing. However, since the LR formulations do not include a UV blocker, the presence of which would increase the critical cure dosage, we are unable to unambiguously determine the reason for the change in Ecrit. We hypothesize that the complex lignin structure can mediate any of several light-absorption events. In one instance, lignin may absorb a photon and generate a radical species that aids in photopolymerization reactions. In another one, lignin may absorb a photon and quench radical species by undergoing redox reactions resulting in the formation of quinones,24 thereby hindering photopolymerization. There is certainly a complex interplay between penetration depth and critical cure dosage that depends upon the amount and chemical makeup of lignin in each sample. We are currently investigating these phenomena further. 3.4. Characterization of 3D printed and cured resins. We used FTIR spectroscopy of the polymerized resins and analysis of FTIR spectra (Figure S3) by

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PCA to probe the chemical structure of the cured resins. From these, we determined that the lignin-M containing polymers were significantly different than the control (Figure 4a). As indicated by the PC1 loadings plot (Figure 4b), the largest difference between PR48 and the LR formulations is due to the presence of unconjugated carbonyl bonds (C=O), acrylate ester bonds (C-O-C) and in-plane bending of C=C groups (1723, 1191, and 1407 cm-1, respectively) in PR48. These can be attributed to unreacted acrylate groups in PR48 due to an incomplete cure. We further observed these results from scanning electron micrographs (vide infra) which we attribute to sub-optimal printing parameters (see Figure 6 below). This suggests that the LR achieved a higher cure conversion than the commercial PR48 formulation using the printing parameters we selected. These printing parameters were chosen based the model in eqn. (1). It is possible that light scattering by the included UV blocker makes this a poor model for evaluating cure properties in PR48. Additionally, the PC2 loadings plot (Figure 4c) indicates that LR15 displayed higher asymmetric and symmetric stretching vibrations of C–H bonds (at 2923 and 2855 cm-1, respectively). This could possibly be attributed to the additional aliphatic groups in lignin, although this difference between the resins is relatively minor as reflected by the low percentage of contribution to the data variance (15%).

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Figure 4. (A) Scores plot of the principal component analysis (PCA) of the FTIR spectra of cured PR48, LR5, LR10, and LR15 resin formulations. The labeling scheme is identical to Figure 2. (B) Loadings plot of principal component 1 (PC1), which accounts for 79% of the data variance. (C) Loadings plot of PC2, which accounts for 15% of the data variance. We performed tensile tests on the cured resins, and the results of these experiments are summarized in Table 3. Interestingly, the cured resins displayed a transition from brittle to ductile behavior in those that contain lignin-M. The elastic modulus showed a 43% decrease from 0.65 GPa with no lignin to 0.37 GPa with 15% lignin-M. Likewise, the ductility increased from a measured 1.87% elongation at break

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for the control to 7.62% for LR15. This indicated that lignin-M was acting as a plasticizer in the resin system. We attribute this phenomenon to the fact that the modified lignin molecules were introducing side chains in the polyacrylate that reduced the chain-tochain interaction forces.25 The decrease in elastic modulus in the LR formulations is likely a result of reduced cross-linking density due to these side chains. Photopolymers are usually brittle because of high cross-linking, so formulations designed to inhibit this are a common strategy to improve toughness. This data suggests lignin could prove useful in these applications. However, further work needs to be done to increase the imparted stiffness before lignin is competitive with conventional materials. Table 3. Mechanical testing of molded resins

Resin

E (GPa)

σR (MPa)

εR (%)

PR48

0.65(5)

11.0(4)

1.87(8)

LR5

0.64(2)

11(1)

3.0(1)

LR10

0.48(2)

18(3)

6(1)

LR15

0.37(2)

15(8)

7.6(1)

Relative uncertainties in the final digit are reported in parentheses. E: tensile modulus; σR: failure stress; εR: strain at break We used thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) of the printed and cured resins to study the thermal properties of these materials. The TGA data (Figure 5) demonstrate that the cured LR resins exhibited different degradation onset temperatures when compared to the control. The mechanism of thermal decomposition of cured polyacrylate resins such as PR48 and the related LR formulations has been the focus of intense investigation by several groups. The rate of thermal decomposition of PR48

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accelerates as the temperature increases as evident by the first derivative of the TG curve. This phenomenon is known to be due to a complex combination of kinetically regulated chain scission and depolymerization reactions.26 In case of the cured LR formulations, we attribute the small weight loss at about 185 °C to scission of the ether bonds that link lignin-M to the growing polyacrylate polymer and the related decomposition of the lignin-M oligomers, owing to the enhanced lability of C–O bonds in comparison to C–C bonds.27

Figure 5. TGA curves (solid lines) for 3D printed commercial PR48 resin and LR formulations. The derivative of the weight curves (dotted lines) demonstrate the different thermal decomposition temperatures among the samples.

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3.5. Morphology and print quality. We used scanning electron microscopy to characterize the 3D printed surfaces (Figure 6). The surface of cured PR48 showed significant gaps between layers, due to a lack of fusion between them. These defects were regularly aligned along the edges of the line scan width where the dosage will be at minimum, whereas the fusion at the center of the cross-line scans extended between the layers. Since the print did not fail on the build platform, we attribute this phenomenon to a higher required UV dosage to attain inter-layer adhesion in PR48. Evidently, at the print settings we have chosen for this study, optimal addition of lignin-M could enhance the photo-reactivity of the acrylate resins, thereby producing better prints at lower UV dosages. LR5 provided the best print quality with relatively smooth surfaces and excellent layer adhesion, despite printing with the fastest laser scan velocity and at the lowest dosage. Print surfaces for LR10 and LR15 had small regions of poor fusion along print lines. These voids tended to be grouped together, suggesting that the presence of lignin-M disrupted the assemblage of polyacrylates due to cross-linking with lignin. Excepting these small regions, the surfaces of the 3D printed LR formulations showed complete fusion between layers, which emphasizes not only that lignin-M is compatible with SLA technology at the print layer level, but also that lignin-M shows great potential as a binding agent for improved print quality.

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Figure 6. SEM images of the print surfaces for PR48 (A), LR5 (B), LR10 (C), and LR15 (D) showing an increase in surface roughness for LR formulations. Scale bars (white rectangles) denote 300 µm. Visual evaluation of the print quality showed that the LR formulations displayed good build geometries compared to that of the commercial resin (Figure 7). High resolution and edge definition is achieved with the designed print settings. A significant degree of curling is present in the cured LR5 print because of the fast cure rate. Faster cure rates generally result in uneven shrinkage, causing a build-up of residual stresses and deformation of the material. Shrinkage can be reduced in this case either by modifying the resin formulation such that it has better optimized cure properties for this resolution or by changing the post-cure process. We did not observe this problem in the slower curing LR10 print in comparison to PR48, so we conclude that the added lignin is not significantly contributing to shrinkage beyond its effect on cure rate. Transparency was reduced with higher amounts of lignin-M, but the resins did not cure fully opaque. Thus, pigmentation could be applied to change the resin color, however, the brown coloration of lignin may limit the range of colors that could be used successfully.

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Figure 7. Photographs of 0% (PR48, top), 5% (LR5, middle), and 10% (LR10, bottom) lignin showing the effect on print quality. Scale bar (white rectangle) denotes 1 cm. 4. Conclusions In this work, we generated new photo-active acrylate resins by mixing commercially available resin components with acylated organosolv lignin. The resulting mixtures contained up to 15% by weight lignin and were used to produce 3D prints via SLA technology. The lignin-containing resin formulations exhibited increased ductility but decreased thermal stability when compared to the commercially available control resin. Overall, we used the LR formulations to generate uniformly fused, high-resolution prints that display enhanced material toughness with a lower UV dosage. Future work

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will focus on investigating the role that lignin plays as a UV blocker in these resin formulations and using strategies to link functional monomers to lignin using C–C bonds instead of thermally labile C–O bonds.

Supporting Information Photographs of as-prepared resins, photograph of a working curve “windowpane”, complete FTIR spectra of printed and cured resins. Acknowledgments This project was supported by funds from the University of Tennessee AgResearch Innovation Fund. Additional funds were provided by the Southeastern Sun Grant Center and the US Department of Transportation, Research and Innovative Technology Administration DTOS59-07-G-00050. D.P.H. and S.C.C. also acknowledge support from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch Project 1012359.

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Graichen, F. H. M.; Grigsby, W. J.; Hill, S. J.; Raymond, L. G.; Sanglard, M.; Smith, D. A.; Thorlby, G. J.; Torr, K. M.; Warnes, J. M., Yes, We Can Make Money Out of Lignin and Other Bio-based Resources. Industrial Crops and Products 2017, 106, 74-85. DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2016.10.036

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Holmberg, A. L.; Nguyen, N. A.; Karavolias, M. G.; Reno, K. H.; Wool, R. P.; Epps, T. H., Softwood Lignin-Based Methacrylate Polymers with Tunable Thermal and Viscoelastic Properties. Macromolecules 2016, 49 (4), 1286-1295. DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.5b02316

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Holmberg, A. L.; Reno, K. H.; Nguyen, N. A.; Wool, R. P.; Epps, T. H., Syringyl Methacrylate, a Hardwood Lignin-Based Monomer for High-T-g Polymeric Materials. Acs Macro Lett 2016, 5 (5), 574-578. DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.6b00270

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Kim, S.; Chmely, S. C.; Nimlos, M. R.; Bomble, Y. J.; Foust, T. D.; Paton, R. S.; Beckham, G. T., Computational Study of Bond Dissociation Enthalpies for a Large Range of Native and Modified Lignins. The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 2011, 2 (22), 2846-2852. DOI: 10.1021/jz201182w

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Table of contents graphic

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Table of Contents graphic 35x15mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 1. (A) Fourier transform infrared spectra of hybrid poplar lignin before (top, brown) and after (bottom, green) methacrylate modification of the OH groups to afford lignin-M. (B) 31P NMR spectra of the same samples (color scheme and position identical) with integration ranges taken from Balakshin and Capanema. 523x290mm (72 x 72 DPI)

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Figure 2. Plot of viscosity versus shear rate of photo curable acrylate resins containing various amounts of lignin-M. 102x102mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 3. Working curves showing cure thickness as a function of the natural log of UV dosage for PR48 and LR formulations. Linear regressions are shown as dotted lines, and the related values are tabulated in Table 2 from Equations 1-3 above. 102x102mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 4. (A) Scores plot of the principal component analysis (PCA) of the FTIR spectra of cured PR48, LR5, LR10, and LR15 resin formulations. The labeling scheme is identical to Figure 2. (B) Loadings plot of principal component 1 (PC1), which accounts for 79% of the data variance. (C) Loadings plot of PC2, which accounts for 15% of the data variance. 178x127mm (273 x 273 DPI)

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Figure 5. TGA curves (solid lines) for 3D printed commercial PR48 resin and LR formulations. The derivative of the weight curves (dotted lines) demonstrate the different thermal decomposition temperatures among the samples. 115x102mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 6. SEM images of the print surfaces for PR48 (A), LR5 (B), LR10 (C), and LR15 (D) showing an increase in surface roughness for LR formulations. Scale bars (white rectangles) denote 300 µm. 165x41mm (294 x 294 DPI)

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Figure 7. Photographs of 0% (PR48, top), 5% (LR5, middle), and 10% (LR10, bottom) lignin showing the effect on print quality. Scale bar (white rectangle) denotes 1 cm. 115x192mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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